Because of that and because GraphQL is really awesome, I decided to make the GraphQL MiddleWare available as a NuGet package. I did some small improvements to make this MiddleWare more configurable and more easy to use in the Startup.cs

NuGet

Currently the package is a prerelease version. That means you need to activate to load preview versions of NuGet packages:

Package name: GraphQl.AspNetCore

Version: 1.0.0-preview1

https://www.nuget.org/packages/GraphQl.AspNetCore/

Install via Package Manager Console:

PM> Install-Package GraphQl.AspNetCore -Pre

Install via dotnet CLI:

dotnet add package GraphQl.AspNetCore --version 1.0.0-preview1

Using the library

You still need to configure your GraphQL schema using the graphql-dotnet library, as described in my last post. If this is done open your Startup.cs and add an using to the GraphQl.AspNetCore library:

Personally I prefer the second way, which is more readable in my opinion.

The root graph type needs to be passed to the GraphQlMiddlewareOptions object, depending on the implementation of your root graph type, you may need to inject the data repository or a EntityFramework DbContext, or whatever you want to use to access your data. In this case I reuse the IBookRepository of the last post and pass it to the BooksQuery which is my root graph type.

Another valid option is to also add the BooksQuery to the dependency injection container and inject it to the Configure method.

Options

The GraphQlMiddlewareOptions are pretty simple. Currently there are only three properties to configure

RootGraphType: This configures your GraphQL query schema and needs to be set. If this property is unset an ArgumentNullException will be thrown.

GraphApiUrl: This property defines your GraphQL endpoint path. The default is set to /graph which means your endpoint is available under //yourdomain.tld/graph

FormatOutput: This property defines whether the output is prettified and indented for debugging purposes. The default is set to false.

This should be enough for the first time. If needed it is possible to expose the Newtonsoft.JSON settings, which are used in GraphQL library later on.

One more thing

I would be happy, if you try this library and get me some feedback about it. A demo application to quickly start playing around with it, is available on GitHub. Feel free to raise some issues and to create some PRs on GitHub to improve this MiddleWare.